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Treatments For Mild To Moderate Sleep Apnea
Bringing about lifestyle or behavioral changes generally treats mild sleep apnea adequately. These alterations may include such things as losing weight, discontinuing smoking, decreasing your ingestion of alcohol before going to bed and not taking ...more info on Sleep Apnea

The B's of Sleep Apnea Treatment
Behavioral therapy is the big "B" therapy of sleep apnea. This is a form of psychological therapy that looks specifically at ways to alter behavior and the cognitive processes that go with it. Cognitive behavioral therapy (often...more info on Sleep Apnea

Using Common Sense Methods to Help Relieve Sleep Apnea Symptoms
Common sense methods come in handy when it comes to relieving sleep apnea symptoms. It is important to always sleep using a pillow under your head for elevation purposes. Buy regular sized pillows as opposed to oversized pillows....more info on Sleep Apnea

Who Suffers from Sleep Apnea and What Can be Done About It?
Sleep apnea is a serious medical problem. Those who suffer from the cessation of breathing can experience what is referred to as "apneic events" anywhere from ten to thirty seconds each time it happens. Those who suffer from severe...more info on Sleep Apnea


Sleep Apnea Treatment Foods that Aid sleep

Sleep Apnea A New Treatment Option For Children

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Learning to Live with Sleep Apnea

Sleep Apnea A Look at Breathing Assistance Devices CPAP VPAP and APAP

Sleep Apnea (also called Sleep Apnoea) is a common sleep disorder that is characterized by brief interruptions of breathing during sleep, which force the sufferer to wake up to resume normal breathing, and disrupt and disturb their normal sleep cycle. These episodes, called apneas, usually last from a few seconds up to as long as sixty seconds in severe cases, and may occur repeatedly throughout the night.

sleep apnea sleep disorder

Obstructive Sleep Apnea: A Common Sleep Disorder

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), the most common form of the sleep disorder, sleep apnea affects about twelve million Americans yearly. Of this number, over a half are prone to loud snoring and are in addition overweight or obese. For reasons not yet completely understood, OSA is more common in males than females and in patients who have large as opposed to small or medium necks.

Where obstructive sleep apnea is concerned, a person's airways are blocked during the night therefore their breathing stops. Normal breathing patterns commonly begin once more after only a few seconds to ten seconds but there are cases where it requires almost a minute for regular breathing patterns to restart. The more elongated period of breathe cessation there is, the more serious the case. Obstructive sleep apnea most frequently occurs in those drink liquor, need to lose weight, and who are prone to snoring, those who drink liquor, those who need to lose weight and those who have one form or another of an anatomical abnormality afflicting their soft palate or jaw. There are times however when a person who doesn't fit any of the above criteria will still develop obstructive sleep apnea.

When muscles in the airways relax excessively while a person sleeps at night is the common cause of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). In just about all cases of OSA there is a "severe narrowing or occlusion of the pharynx" that seriously obstructs or completely prevents breathing all together. This brings about an inordinate amount of carbon dioxide to accumulate and once the brain identifies it the "airway muscles are activated which opens the airway, allowing breathing to resume but interrupting deep sleep."

Obstructive sleep apnea develops as a consequence of constant episodes of airway blockage during sleep. Approximately two percent of women and four percent of men who suffer from sleep apnea meet what is deemed as the "diagnostic criteria" for the sleep disorder, which averages an estimated ten bouts of apnea or what is referred to as "apneic events" during one hour. An apneic event can be "either an apnea, characterized by complete cessation of airflow for at least ten seconds, or a hypopnea in which airflow decreases by fifty percent for ten seconds or decreases by thirty percent if there is an associated decrease in the oxygen saturation or an arousal from sleep." Sleep apnea is given a grade or level by sleep researchers which is calculated by the number of apneic events that occur every hour. This is referred to as the "apnea-hypopnea index" (or AHI). The normal level of an AHI is less than five whereas one that lies somewhere between five to fifteen is mild and a moderate AHI would be fifteen to thirty. The highest level or most severe is thirty or more apneic occurances every hour.

Extreme tiredness during the daytime is one of the common symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea. A person suffering from this sleep problem can experience a number of other symptoms. These symptoms include dozing off to sleep during the busy workday, headaches in the A.M., irritability, anxiety, depression, difficulty concentrating on tasks, weight gain, behavioral changes and/or changes in mood, absentmindedness and an increase in a person's heart rate. Also symptoms can include a desire to urinate frequently and nocturnal enuresis ("The uncontrolled or involuntary discharge of urine").

If you or a loved one either has or suspect that you might suffer from obstructive sleep apnea, seek medical attention.

If left untreated, Sleep Apnea can be life threatening. Excessive Daytime Sleepiness (EDS) can cause people to fall asleep at inappropriate times, such as while driving, endangering their lives and the lives of their passengers and those around them.

Sleep apnea also appears to put individuals at risk for stroke and Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIAs), also known as "mini-strokes", and is associated with coronary heart disease, heart failure, irregular heartbeat, heart attack, gout and high blood pressure.

So, if you or a loved one are suffering from sleep apnea, be sure to see your doctor so that the sleep apnea symptoms can be treated, removed, or reduced before they become life threatening.

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